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Tonga Religious Life in the Twentieth Century
Elizabeth Colson
出版
African Books Collective
, 2006
主題
Foreign Language Study / African Languages
History / Africa / South / General
Religion / Indigenous, Folk & Tribal
Social Science / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
Social Science / Customs & Traditions
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Black Studies (Global)
ISBN
9982240455
9789982240451
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=G9oK8p8Mh8MC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The religious life of the Tonga-speaking peoples of southern Zambia is examined over the last century, in the sense of how they have thought about the nature of their world, the meaning of their own lives, and the sources of good and evil in which their cosmology and society have been transformed. The twelve chapters cover Time, Space and Language; Basic Themes, Tonga Religious Vocabulary and its Referents; the Vocabulary of Shrines and Substance; Homestead and Bush; Ritual Communities and Actors; Rituals of the Life Course; Death and its Rituals; Evil and Witchcraft; and Christianity and Tonga Experience. The author has drawn on dairies by research assistants, and field notes and research of fellow anthropologists, but above all from her own interaction with Tonga people since 1946. The older people gave first hand memories of Ndebele and Lozi raids, David Linvingstone encamped near their villages in 1856 and 1862, the arrival of colonial administrators, traders, missionaries and European and Indian settlers, and in some cases, the end of colonial rule. Their experience and that of their children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren provides the basis for understanding Tonga religious experience. Elizabeth Colson is an American anthropologist who is widely published on the Tonga. Her research interests have particularly concentrated on the Gwembe Valley.